Friday, November 26, 2021

What You Don't Get Taught About Thanksgiving and the Pilgrims

 

Troy D. Smith

November 26, 2021

 

Two days ago, on the day before Thanksgiving, I was contacted by two different news venues to publicly opine about Thanksgiving in my capacity as a professional historian. The first was a local (Cookeville) radio station, the other was a local TV station in Chattanooga. The radio reporter only wanted to ask me a couple of brief questions about food, which I answered, but the TV reporter also wanted to talk about the story of Thanksgiving. Specifically, I was asked to add any detail that I thought might be interesting or important to know. So I did. That whole interview took about 15 minutes.

In that time, I told the parts of the Thanksgiving story that most people don’t know and are rarely, if ever, broached in K-12. “Wow,” the reporter said, “I never knew any of that -you never get taught that stuff in school.” I remember thinking to myself, though, that I would be amazed if any of those things made it into the final piece.

I was not wrong. Not a word of it was. I do understand that they were looking for a one-or-two-minute retelling of the feel-good myths to show on the holiday, and were not planning on showing anything that would challenge their audience’s assumptions or worldview… and certainly nothing which might make their viewers mad because it was an uncomfortable truth. When the fact becomes legend, as the newspaperman said in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, print the legend.

Essentially, only the things I said about the menu on that first Pilgrim harvest feast, and the things that support the basic story as everyone was taught it in school (selectively taken from my larger conversation), were used. Again, I understand that editing 15 minutes down to 2 minutes means that 90% would be cut. But looking at my quotes in the article (which you can see here), you would get the impression I said nothing about the Native American Indian perspective on Thanksgiving.

So I decided I would share with you, here, the story I told the reporter.

The Pilgrims arrived at Plymouth in 1620. There were about a hundred of them. They really weren’t very well-versed in taking care of themselves in this new environment, and at the end of their first winter slightly more than half of them had died. They got crops planted in the spring -with significant help via pointers from an indigenous man named Tisquantum, which the Pilgrims shortened to Squanto. The following autumn they harvested those crops, and decided to have a thanksgiving feast to celebrate. This took place sometime between late September and early November, probably sometime in October, of 1621.

They did NOT invite the Wampanoags to their feast. In fact, Wampanoag leader Massasoit showed up with about 90 warriors… because the Pilgrims, in their celebration, had been firing their guns into the sky (which does make this sound like a uniquely American occasion) and the Wampanoags feared the newcomers had started an attack on them. When Massasoit saw that it was only a party, he had his men contribute five deer they had caught. But, to make it clear: there were no indigenous women and children present, only warriors; they had not been invited; it was kind of a tense situation, and was partially a Wampanoag show of strength.

Have you ever wondered how Squanto was able to communicate with the Pilgrims? It was because he spoke English. The Pilgrims were not his first contact with Englishmen; in fact, for years previous, English ships had plied up and down the coast, fishing and trading. And, whenever they saw a Native person alone or in only a small group on shore, they would kidnap them and carry them back across the Atlantic to sell them as slaves. This had happened to Squanto several years earlier (he had been tricked into boarding a ship) and he had spent years in Europe as a slave -first in Spain, then in London. He made his way back to New England via ship -perhaps, some have speculated, working as a sailor, or perhaps still a slave now owned by a naval officer. At any rate, he made his way home 14 or so years after his abduction, only to find that his people -the Patuxet, members of the Wampanoag Federation -were all dead. They had perished of disease introduced by English sailors. Incidentally, there were at least a couple of other Native American men in the area who had spent years as slaves of the English, including a Wampanoag named Samoset.

When the Pilgrims arrived, many Wampanoags wanted to wipe them out. They had come to associate the English with slavers. Squanto told Massasoit tales of the grandeur of London, and helped convince him that the English would make good trading partners -and would allow the Wampanoag Federation to maintain their primacy over their rivals in the region, the Narragansets (and, to a lesser degree, the Pequots). The balance of power had been disrupted by the epidemic that had killed so many Wampanoags. Hence the decision was made to allow the Pilgrims to occupy the lands of the deceased Patuxets. From the Pilgrim perspective, the fact they arrived to find empty land that was not only arable, but cleared as if it were simply waiting there for them, was proof that God was blessing them and was with their endeavor. Squanto was their principal contact. Many of you, like me, may have been taught in school that Squanto showed them an old Native American trick of planting a dead fish at the base of a cornstalk, for fertilizer. The fact is, he did show them that… but it was not a Native American practice. It was common in Mediterranean Europe. So Squanto must have learned it from Southern Europeans, either in Spain or perhaps from Italian sailors, and then taught it to the English.

By the way, Massasoit and other Wampanoags started getting suspicious of Squanto, and wondering if he were accurately translating between them and the Pilgrims. Squanto’s actions seemed, in the eye of some Wampanoags, to principally benefit himself; he may have been playing both ends against the middle. One year after the thanksgiving feast, Squanto died of an “Indian fever”; some historians suspect he may have been poisoned as a collaborator/traitor by the Wampanoags.

None of that adds up to a happy feast between friendly allies, cementing bonds of amity.

The reporter asked what would have happened if the Wampanoags who wanted to kill the Pilgrims had won out; would we still be here? What would have happened, I said, is that they would have been dead. We would still have been here, because other English colonies were being established- John Smith and company had been in Jamestown for 13 years before the Pilgrims ever showed up. The only real difference would be that we wouldn’t be talking about Pilgrims, other than the way we talk about Roanoke -as a failed colony. Most of the Thanksgiving traditions we associate with Pilgrims actually started in the late 1800s or after; Thanksgiving as an official holiday was instituted by Abraham Lincoln in the middle of the Civil War, as a way to unify Americans.

I pointed out that, to the majority of my indigenous friends, Thanksgiving is at best an unpopular holiday and at worst a day of mourning. It is extremely important to realize, I said, that within fifteen years of this feast the Pilgrims and the many Puritans who had joined them were committing genocide against neighboring tribes the Pequots and Narragansets (after the latter had allied with them against he Pequots), and within fifty years they had virtually wiped out the very tribe who had helped them, the Wampanoags. Pilgrims were nasty people to Native Americans, and were really bad neighbors in general (see "Thomas Morton").

After pointing out that the Pilgrims would probably have perished without Wampanoag help, I said that most people do not even know that November is National Native American Heritage month… and, really, every day should be a day for honoring Native Americans past and present.

This is the very short, 15-minute version of the Thanksgiving story. There are many more details, most of which I did not include in this abridged version. But there is a lot of unacknowledged truth just in this brief explanation.

The problem is, though, that most people prefer to hear a lie that makes them feel good than a truth that does not. And most people -especially the politicians who control public schools and much of the media that is reliant on commercial sponsors -would rather teach the warm and fuzzy misrepresentations which people expect to hear than the hard truth.

Benedict Anderson wrote several years ago that nations are “imagined communities” -they agree to forge a common identity based on imaginary connections and an imaginary origin story (or mythology). This explains the discomfort many feel when someone begins to unravel that mythology.

But historians are not supposed to be mythologizers. And, more importantly, Native American Indians are real people, with real ancestors and a real past, who do not deserve to have their reality denied or downplayed in order to make everybody else feel good about themselves. Finally, blinding ourselves to history in favor of comfortable mythology keeps us from understanding, not just what happened, but what the consequences are in the present, which then prevents us from addressing many of the issues that still plague us.

You shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free.


--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 A complete list of "A Liberal Dose" columns can be found HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE 

 

 

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